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Project legacy for Peaty

11 Nov 2017

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Adam Peaty’s 2017 has been a roaring success, but if there
was any fear of the multiple world champion swimmer taking his foot off the
gas, then those are now firmly quashed. Peaty is a man determined to build a
legacy.

Olympic champion before coming into the year, Peaty was the undoubted one to watch in 2017 – a pressure he took to with ease.

But when you’ve got championship and world records to break, it doesn’t matter who is behind you when reaching the wall is the only thing that matters.

At the World Championships in Budapest, the next step of Peaty’s legacy was set in stone, with 50m and 100m gold and, 4x100m medley silver coming the way of a 22-year-old who feels there is more still in the tank.

“Being the man to beat is not something I think about, I just go out there to race and it’s all about humbling myself, keeping myself grounded and thankfully I have a great support unit that helps me do that,” Peaty said.

“I love having people watching me – that’s what drove me home in Rio, knowing that people were watching and knowing they would wake up the next day with me being one of the first victories for Team GB.

“It is what got me to that gold medal, the more people who are watching, the better, and I’m able to deal with that because I love racing.

“Keeping winning is the way you build up that legacy, you show the younger ones that you don’t have to fear the big nations and even though we’re a small country, we’ve got a massive, powerful team.

“Hopefully the next generation of swimmers are going to be thinking that and aren’t scared. My aim is to create a culture where we’re going to take on the Australians, take on the South Africans, the Americans, whoever we’re racing and to not have that fear.”

Such is the way he has continued to dominate – not losing an individual race in four years – some of Peaty’s exploits have surprised even the man himself.

That was evident in Hungary when smashing the 26-second barrier in the 50m breaststroke to break the world record for the second time in a day.

But with the team behind him and the strength to up his game when it matters most, few would bet against him doing the business all over again for Team England in next year’s Commonwealth Games. “Without that spider web of people, you can’t stitch together those two performances that help you out over a year.” Peaty added.

Adam Peaty will be back in action on home soil early in 2018, taking to the water at the Royal Commonwealth Pool in Edinburgh with the aim of defending his two British titles, the 50m and 100m Breaststroke.

Tickets for the British Swimming Championships 2018 are now on-sale here and for more details about the Championships click here